His father was the mathematician Max Noether and his elder sister was the mathematician Emmy Noether.
Biography
Fritz Noether's father Max Noether was professor of mathematics at the University of Erlangen. Starting in 1904, Fritz studied mathematics in Erlangen and then in Munich, where he obtained his doctorate in 1909 with a dissertation about rolling movements of a sphere on surfaces of rotation, written under the direction of Aurel Voss.[3] He obtained his habilitation in 1911 at the Technische Hochschule Karlsruhe.
He married in 1911 and had two children:[4] Herman D. Noether, born 1912 who became a chemist, and Gottfried E. Noether, born 1915 who became an Americanstatistician and educator, and later wrote a brief biography of his father.[5]
Not allowed to work in Nazi Germany for being a Jew, he emigrated in 1934 to the Soviet Union, while his sister Emmy emigrated to the United States.[5] Fritz was appointed to a professorship at the Tomsk State University. His son Gottfried studied mathematics in Tomsk.
In November 1937, during the Great Purge, he was arrested at his home in Tomsk by the NKVD. Albert Einstein wrote a letter on his behalf to Soviet foreign minister Maxim Litvinov, without success.[7] On 23 October 1938, Noether was sentenced to 25 years of imprisonment on charges of espionage and sabotage. He served time in various prisons.
On 22 Dec 1988, the Plenum of the USSR Supreme Court ruled that Noether had been convicted on groundless charges and voided his sentence, thus fully rehabilitating him.[8]
In 1921 he introduced the operators now known as Fredholm operators and the concept of the index of such an operator, giving an example of an operator whose kernel and cokernel have different finite dimension and providing a formula for the difference of these dimensions using a complex contour integral.
In 1923 Fritz Noether presented a critique of Werner Heisenberg's dissertation. Heisenberg had analyzed the transition from laminar to turbulent flow in fluids, and Noether claimed that the applied methods were not rigorous.[4][6]
References
^ abTollmien, Dr. Cordula (13 June 2006) [1990]. "Lebensdaten" [Lifetime dates]. Lebensläufe Emmy Noethers (in German). Mathematischen Institut der Universität Göttingen. Archived from the original on 10 May 2021. Retrieved 4 September 2015.